Second point: To reduce citizens of a state to an identity with the politics of their government is not just a gross moral simplification. It’s also a gift to people like Putin and Lukashenko, who want nothing more than to have people believing that they alone speak for all their people, and that their policies are universally supported. It should be possible for Russians and Belarusians to be both proud of their countries and ashamed of their governments.
Third point: In recent years, Putin has gone out of his way to castigate Woke Western culture for being censorious and repressive, not to mention hypocritical. “They’re now engaging in the cancel culture, even removing Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich and Rachmaninoff from posters,” he complained last month. What the B.A.A. has done only validates the allegation.
Fourth point: Americans are supposed to believe in openness, competition and fair play. We’re also supposed to believe that democratic societies never shine brighter than when they uphold these principles in the face of adversaries who flout them. It would be nice to see the B.A.A. celebrate those ideals.
In “Animal House,” Otter defends his fellow Deltas by insisting, “You can’t hold a whole fraternity responsible for the behavior of a few sick, perverted individuals.” On this point, at least, let’s give Otter his due: You also don’t hold entire societies responsible for the behavior of their despotic leaders. The B.A.A. should think this one over and let the Russians and Belarusians compete under their countries’ flags for the hope of what their countries might someday become, free from the yoke of their present leaders.